Home :: Books :: Teens  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens

Travel
Women's Fiction
Sphere

Sphere

List Price: $16.45
Your Price: $11.19
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 4 .. 67 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Extremely Enjoyable Popcorn
Review: You've got to give it to Michael Crichton: he writes one heck of a page-turner. Open one of his books with the idea that you'll just read a chapter or two before bedtime and you'll suddenly be bleary-eyed at three in the morning. And although this particular title, which is somewhat less well known than such Crichton novels as THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN and JURASSIC PARK, it still packs a bestseller wallop.

The premise is classic Crichton. In his younger days, psychologist Norman Johnson was approached by the United States government to write a report on the psychological impact of an encounter with extra-terrestrials--and now, on the basis of his rather flippant recommendations, he finds himself en route to a possible UFO crash sight on the floor of the Pacific ocean. Once established with his colleges in an underwater habitat, the government team encounters a mysterious space craft that contains a still-more mysterious sphere, and those who come into contact with it undergo an unexpected change.

The writing is crisp and clean, the hard science is handled quite skillfully, and Crichton plays out his story at a breathless pace: yes, a page-turner if ever there was one. Still, it is worth noting that SPHERE displays Crichton's weaknesses as clearly as it does his strengths. Strictly speaking, Crichton hasn't had an original concept in some thirty years, and just as he rehashed his screenplay for WESTWORLD into the novel JURASSIC PARK, so does he rehash THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN into SPHERE. The novel also contains both the foundational sexism and ambiguous conclusion so typical of Crichton's work.

Ultimately, SPHERE is popcorn: we've all had it before and you can't make a truly satisfying meal of it. But it is tremendously enjoyable all the same, and where is SPHERE is concerned... well, you'll eat every kernal in the bowl.

GFT, Amazon Reviewer

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Interesting, but never hits the mark
Review: I vividly remember when I read Sphere that I thought it would play better as a movie; and if people think the movie is a bit meandering and weird, the book is certainly the same. Crichton gives us three partial stories for the price of one, but unfortunately none of them ever seem to click.

The book opens with an extremely promising, thought-provoking concept that is too quickly and unfortunately abandoned: Beneath the modern-day ocean a ship thought to be alien, sunken for three hundred years, turns out to be American-built, having apparently traveled through time to get there. There's no sign of any crew, and the flight recorder only gives them a hint to how the ship got there. It's a great story at that point, but there Crichton decides to deal with the one oddity found aboard: The sphere.

Without getting too much into the specifics, it's enough to say that the second two partial stories don't do the first one justice. We get a bit of mystery over what's inside the sphere, and what (if anything) might be trying to communicate and how. Then follows a tale of paranoia as the characters each have different suspicions about what's going on, and none of them can be sure whether they can even trust themselves. It all ends on an unsatisfying note, having accomplished little or nothing.

It seems clear that there was no set theme to Sphere, and as a result the story fragmented under stress. It started out so promising, but the really juicy and fascinating questions were never answered. To me the mystery of the ship and its origins and history was far more intriguing than the mystery of the alien sphere, yet the former was sacrificed to bring on the rest of the story. Having read some real classics, I don't count this among them; Sphere was a novel without direction or purpose, that seemed more like a bad echo of Forbidden Planet than an original work. In some ways it's an interesting read, but I wouldn't rank it too highly on the reading list.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Better Than The Movie
Review: Annotation: A sci-fi thriller that has a twist at the end you couldn't see coming. Michael Crichton sets the stage deep in the ocean as a group of scientist explores an unknown spaceship and finds a mysterious sphere that causes strange things to happen.

Author bio: Michael Crichton was born in Chicago in 1942 and attended Harvard medical school in 1964. He has produced books such as Jurassic Park, Timeline, and Congo. He also created the hit show ER and is the only person to have the number one movie, number one book, and number one show all at the same time.

Evaluation: This book was awesome! I couldn't put it down for a minute. One complaint I have is that when they made the movie, they tried to make it "hollywood adaptable" and messed up some key plot points. The part I liked best was when Harry uses his simple logic to determine that they were going to die in the spaceship because the ship was in the future and there was no sign that the future knew of them visiting the ship. It was so simple I was mad I didn't pick it out before I read it! This book is a definite read for anyone who is a science fiction fan.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Crichton scores with under water adventure
Review: After going on a prehistoric island and then deep into the African Congo, Micheal Crichton ventures deep into the bottom of the Pacific ocean for a story that will keep you guessing time and time again.
Lying at the bottom of the Pacific is a futuristic U.S. spacecraft that seemed to have crashed there over 300 years ago. A trained group of military specialists along with a pyschologist, are assigned to live in a habitat set up at the bottom of the ocean next the ship and explore it. The presence of an alien sphere and strange occurances cause the crew to suffer heavy losses and have their lives changed forever.
This book used the idea of the existence of black holes, and that in the future, humans will visit alien lifeforms of other planets. Along with the solid story line, Crichton created one of the most intriguing books i have ever read. I am usaully very good at predicting what is going to happen in a novel, but this book constantly had me thinking one thing, and finding out that later that what I thought was totally wrong. Sphere was very hard to put down and suspenseful throughout.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The book is better than the movie!!!
Review: I'm so glad I read this book before I saw the movie because I probably wouldn't have picked the book up after seeing Sharon Stone, Dustin Hoffman and the other stars playing the parts so unlike was portrayed in the book. That's just my opinion though. The book was definitely 10 times better than the movie with the portrayal of strange huge squids above the undersea station and other fantastic, mind boggling happenings that can only happen in a book. Things that special effects can't even make up for a movie. The book was spine chilling to the point that I felt as if I were in the seastation with the crew. The story is about a strange sphere that appears in the deep ocean. I don't know how everyone else read it but I felt the writer was trying to convey to us that the sphere was not from outspace at all but was from the future and had actually been made in the USA. I'd still give the movie version of this book 3 stars but I implore you, if you decide to see the movie, read the book first! Great story, great plot, great writer as always.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chilling...
Review: This is another book from Crichton that I love...

It's about a huge spaceship found at the floor of the ocean, and the team of scientists that go down to find out what it is, and what it's for.

The strange part? It's been at the floor of the ocean for hundreds- maybe even THOUSANDS of years.

The cool part? It was and American ship sent there from the future and has a large sphere on the inside.

Soon after they discover the ship, one of the team members opens the sphere and walks inside. He's found later, unconscious outside it. And after that, strange, coded, messages appear on the underwater station's computers from an unseen character named 'Jerry'.

Bad things happen, presumably coming from Jerry; a huge squid attacks the ship over and over again, and soon only three members of the team are left.

From its interesting beginning to its chilling ending, this book carries you on a thrill ride that seems entirely possible... just like all the Crichton books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Enter the Unknown
Review: I have recently read Sphere by Michael Crichton. I found this book to be filled with adventure and intrigue. It follows a very intelligent psychologist, Norman Johnson. He is sent to what he thinks is a plane crash site. He normally goes to them to help the families cope with the loss of loved ones. He thought it was just a routine job and that he would be home shortly, he was wrong. The government called him in to research an underwater spacecraft with a team of experienced scientists. He set up the team and went underwater into a habitat to study the craft. He gets more and more involved as the team enters the craft. The suspense starts to build up when they enter the ship and terrible things happen to the crew. As they venture further into the craft they find a shiny silver ball about the size of a large merchant ship. They enter the ship and that's when everything goes wrong. The sphere seems to be able to look into their minds and know what they are thinking. It will carry out the task that that person is thinking about. As the story develops more, each team member gets scared for their lives and starts to distrust one another. The sphere begins to carry out terrible tasks and many team members lose their sense of sanity. Norman has to take complete control of the team and make sure that the rest stays sane and in a working manner. As the sphere gets more and more violent, the team has to make a choice between leaving and forgetting about a scientific breakthrough or continue on with their important investigation.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A page-turner, but with a disappointing end
Review: This is one of the few novels is really couldn't put down before finishing it. Crichton succeeds in the first half of the story in building a powerful sense of mystery integrated in an admirably well-documented scientific and technical background. This background justified making the spaceship an american ship from the future as the only logical possibility. At this point, you can only expect the explanation to the mystery that is the sphere they find inside to be something extraordinarily imaginative, as the author dropped hints at what the possibilities are (I liked the idea of beings from a more than 4 dimensions world; how would they have interacted with our world? Our the possibility of time and space reversing roles.) Unfortunately, the author's imagination seems to suffer a breakdown in the second half of the book. Making the sphere a modern equivalent of the good old Aladdin's lamp, a device allowing one's to make anything one's wishes come true, was an easy and disastrous way out. Anyone who has ever tried writing knows there is no better way to kill the plausibility of your story than giving infinite powers to your characters (near the end, when Dr Goodman acquires these powers himself, why don't he uses them to get back home instantly and solve everything as if nothing happened instead of doing it the old, painstaking but more interesting way? And at the end, why don't the survivors use these same powers to resurrect their dead companions?) So after closing this book, we are left feeling a bit disappointed. It would be interesting to pick up this story from the middle and try to write a more imaginative conclusion.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Another Micheal Crichton masterpiece!
Review: This book is truly great. Michael Crichton has the ability to create great thrillers like this. The plot is great and I couldn't put it down. I think one of my favorite moments was when they are talking to the computer and it decides it's going to try to kill them. This book is a must read for any Crichton/science-fiction fan.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A psychological thriller to enthrall your mind
Review: This book doesn't fail to deliver the thrilling suspense that you would expect from a Crichton. This winding tail of suspense and mystery keeps you guessing until the finale. Norman Johnson, a psychologist, is called to inspect an "airplane" crash in the middle of the south pacific. Little does he know the airplane that he has been sent to inspect is not an airplane at all. It is a spacecraft. A spacecraft that has lain there for 300 hundred years. THe coral covered spacecraft has a secret that was never meant to be discovered, a sphere of "alien" origin. When the sphere never fails to intrigue the personnel of the "top secret" crash site, all hell breaks loose.

This thriller is a mix of three books. It has the psychology from "Lord of the Flies," a setting of "20,000 leagues under the Sea," and it has the suspense that Crichton marinates all of his books in. Crichton never ceases to amaze and astonish with his mix of science fiction and action. I would recommend this book to anyone who loves Crichton, or any science fiction book. I have read "Eaters of the Dead," "THe Andromeda Strain," "Timeline," and "Sphere." "Sphere," I think, is the best. READ IT!


<< 1 2 3 4 .. 67 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates